Control Center is one of the more useful parts of iOS where you can easily toggle on or off some of your most important features, and where you can access shortcuts to your device’s most useful utilitarian apps.

Unfortunately, Apple wasn’t thinking three-dimensionally when they launched the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus, and as a result, Control Center doesn’t take advantage of the 3D Touch display. That’s where a new jailbreak tweak release called QuickCenter, which can be had from Cydia for $0.99, comes to the rescue.

QuickCenter: add a third dimension to Control Center

QuickCenter does what Apple failed to do the first time, and integrates 3D Touch into the Control Center interface. With it, you can use 3D Touch on the various toggle switches and even on the shortcut buttons to access menus full of Quick Actions.

Among the different things you can do include:

Wi-Fi: geseture on the Wi-Fi toggle to switch between available networks

Bluetooth: gesture on the Bluetooth toggle to switch between available devices

Do Not Disturb: gesture on the DND toggle for ‘Always’ or ‘Only on Lock screen‘

Camera: gesture on the Camera shortcut to bring up a fully-featured view finder

Flashlight: gesture on the Flashlight shortcut to enable the flashlight or strobe light

Alarms: gesture on the Alarms shortcut to toggle your alarms on or off

Here’s an example of the Camera view finder, which supports focus, resizing, and more all from within the view finder:

That’s not all either! The tweak fully supports Polus, which means if you have any Polus shortcuts, you can even use QuickCenter to use 3D Touch with those shortcuts too. QuickCenter also plays nicely with the following Control Center-modifying tweaks:

Seng

FlipControlCenter

CCSettings

QuickActivator

SimpleCenters

Auxo Legacy Edition

Configuring QuickCenter

QuickCenter adds a preferences pane to the Settings app after you install it where you’ll be able to configure the tweak to your liking.

From the main preferences pane, you can enable or disable the tweak on demand, see a user guide, view information about the creators, and report any bugs that you find so the developers can work on fixes for them. You’ll also notice two major settings cells, entitled Configuration and Security.

From the Configuration settings cell, you can configure any of the following options:

Choose a gesture for accessing Quick Action menus for toggles and shortcuts

Choose the time it take before your gesture is recognized by QuickCenter

Choose how many Quick Action shortcuts are allowed to show in a the menu

Reset the settings to their defaults

From the Security settings cell, you can configure any of the following options:

Enable or disable QuickCenter access on the Lock screen

Enable or disable QuickCenter access from within your apps

Enable or disable Wi-Fi network switching from the Lock screen

The last option we just mentioned there is quite important, as allowing anyone to switch your Wi-Fi network from the Lock screen while you’re not looking could land you on a potentially malicious network where your usage could be monitored and personal information could be stolen from you. So we recommend disallowing Wi-Fi access on the Lock screen for your security.

My thoughts on QuickCenter

QuickCenter is a great addition for jailbroken devices whether you sport 3D Touch or not, because the tweak is built to support not only the 3D Touch display on the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus, but also tap and holds for devices that don’t have a 3D Touch display. This means even iPhone 6 and earlier users can enjoy QuickCenter too.

It extends upon the functionality of an existing part of iOS and it does so in an Apple-esque way without getting in the way of too much. The gestures are even Apple-like in that they take advantage of the under-used 3D Touch display system-wide.

The tweak’s functionality feels like it fills a missing void in Apple’s iOS operating system. I can definitely see Apple having an interest in implementing something like this in the future, because its implementation and usability are quite innovative to say the least.

Wrapping up

QuickCenter is something I think Control Center aficionados are going to love. It’s nice to be able to access your switching options and shortcuts right from Control Center from anywhere, and with that in mind, if you asked me if spending the $0.99 for QuickCenter was worth it, I would say yes!